BOULDER, Colo. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — July 9, 2015 —
Anark
Corporation, leading provider of Model Based Enterprise (MBE) and
Visual Communication software solutions, announced today that it is
partnering with NCMS (The National Center for Manufacturing Sciences)
and NAWCAD (Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division) on their ground
breaking “Multi-PLM and Multi-CAD drives Common 3D PDF MBE Best
Practices” deployment project sponsored through the joint NCMS & DOD
Commercial Technologies for Maintenance Activities (CTMA).

This program takes the next major step in establishing processes and
procedures which will streamline and connect NAWCAD’s multiple disparate
PLM and CAD Engineering tools to drive common and open 3D MBE best
practices to the many downstream consumers of engineering data.

For the past six years the Department of Defense has been leading the
way in developing best practices and procedures to enable the 3D Model
Based Enterprise (3D MBE) through the transformation of their Native CAD
plus Model Based Definition (MBD) data into open platforms that are free
to view and free to deploy like 3D PDF and 3D HTML.

These efforts culminated in February 2013 with the official release of
MIL-STD-31000 Rev A (The 3D TDP) specification which clearly signaled
the DOD’s intentions to dramatically improve the communications of
design intent, reduce errors and improve the response time of their
thousands of suppliers by moving away from the volumes of 2D Paper
Technical Data Packages (TDPs) currently used towards a more concise,
complete and graphically rich 3D Model Based Enterprise.

“Through various DOD projects, including last year’s NCMS, NAVAIR and
Anark ‘Common 3D PDF TDP Project,’ we have proven that the ISO Standard
3D PDF platform is capable of securely containing, distributing and
rendering complex 3D Engineering CAD plus MBD data as well as other
required TDP artifacts (like Provisioning, Packaging and Manufacturing
Information), from Navy, Army and Air Force Engineering Data stored in
Native Creo, NX, and CATIA parts and assemblies,” said Dana Ellis,
Program Manager at National Center for Manufacturing Sciences.

“Being able to publish and distribute our MBD Engineering CAD data into
Common 3D PDF TDPs will allow NAVAIR the freedom to contract and
interact with our supplier base with more intuitive and less ambiguous
Data Packages. By eliminating 2D Drawings for the communication of
design intent, we expect to see a reduction in the number of design
mis-interpretations and rework produced by our suppliers,” said John
Schmelzle, PE and MBD Initiative Lead for the Naval Air Warfare Center
at Lakehurst New Jersey.

This year the NCMS, NAVAIR and Anark are expanding these 3D PDF TDP best
practices established by NAVAIR-Lakehurst in two important directions:

First is to add the processing of Native NX+MBD 3D Engineering data used
by NAVAIR-North Island and CATIA+MBD data delivered by some of NAVAIRs
prime contractors into the Common NAVAIR 3D PDF TDP engineering release
template. This will allow both Lakehurst and North Island Engineering
practices to generate a Common 3D PDF TDP Engineering Release Document
even though the source of the 3D Engineering data may come from anyone
of three (3) different CAD systems (NX, CATIA or Creo). Transforming
these different sources of 3D Engineering data into a single common 3D
PDF TDP will promote efficiencies throughout the NAVY, the Defense
Logistics Agency and the thousands of suppliers that need to interact
with NAVAIRs engineering data.

Second is to establish the necessary integration links which will allow
both the Teamcenter Data Repository in North Island and the Windchill
Data Repository in Lakehurst to automatically generate these Common 3D
PDF TDPs based on standard Teamcenter Work Flows and standard Windchill
Work Flows respectively.

“When we have completed our new Multi-PLM and Multi-CAD to Common 3D PDF
TDP Project between Lakehurst and FRCSW, and the PLM backbone at the
COMFRC, we will have proven the concept that it is more cost effective,
and efficient for the whole of DOD if we focus our time and energy on
developing transformation bridges to universal standards such as 3D PDF
and 3D HTML, or others rather than trying to force one CAD and PLM
platform across all of NAVAIR's operations, at other end users or at
consumers such as our FRC manufacturing centers or DLA, which would be
costly, contentious and take years to implement,” said Rick Mendoza,
Engineering Manager at NAVAIR North Island.

“We will also be in a position to deploy our manufacturing and assembly
3D data with all required geometrical properties, PMI, and required
metadata and logistics information for the end user to readily consume
without their needing to have (or have access to) all combinations of
CAD and PLM systems,” continued Mendoza.

About NCMS and the CTMA

The National Center for Manufacturing Sciences, the largest cross
industry collaborative Research & Development consortium in North
America, is dedicated to driving innovation in commercial, defense,
robotics and environmentally sustainable manufacturing. NCMS has over 25
years of experience in the formation and management of complex,
multi-partner collaborative R&D programs, and is backed by corporate
members representing virtually every manufacturing sector.

This current project to show that Multi-PLM and Multi-CAD Enterprises
can unify common best practices with the Adobe 3D PDF Platform, is part
of the lifesaving Commercial Technologies for Maintenance Activities
(CTMA) program. The CTMA program is a Department of Defense supported,
NCMS initiative that ensures American troops and their equipment are
ready to face any situation, with the most up-to-date and
best-maintained platforms and tools on earth.